Record

StorageSiteUCL Special Collections
LevelItem
Reference Number MS GRAVES/26
TitleJacobi, "Meditationes Analyticae"
Date1825
DescriptionManuscript volume containing Karl Gustav Jacob Jacobi's 'Meditationes Analyticae' in his own hand, dated 1825.
Extent1 volume containing 45 leaves
AdminHistoryBorn in Potsdam, Prussia, 1804; became extraordinary professor of mathematics at the University of Knigsberg, 1827; ordinary professor, 1829; first became known through his work on number theory; unaware of the work of the Norwegian Niels Henrik Abel, formulated a theory of elliptic functions based on four theta functions; his results in elliptic functions were published in 'Fundamenta Nova Theoriae Functionum Ellipticarum' ('New Foundations of the Theory of Elliptic Functions'), 1829; demonstrated that, just as elliptic functions can be obtained by inverting elliptic integrals, hyperelliptic functions can be obtained by inverting hyperelliptic integrals, 1832; this led him to the formation of the theory of Abelian functions of p variables; died in Berlin, 1851.
CustodialHistoryThe manuscript formed part of the library of John Thomas Graves (1806-1870), mathematician and Professor of Jurisprudence at University College London, whose collection included manuscripts dating from the 15th to the 19th century, relating mainly to mathematics. Formerly Graves 2791. Other pressmark: 142.f.2.
AcquisitionGraves' library was bequeathed to University College London in 1870.
AccessStatusOpen
AccessConditionsThe papers are available subject to the usual conditions of access to Archives and Manuscripts material, after the completion of a Reader's Undertaking.
FindingAidsDorothy K Coveney, 'A Descriptive Catalogue of Manuscripts in the Library of University College London' (London, 1935); handlist at University College London Special Collections.
PublnNoteNot published in this form, but the manuscript was apparently made use of in Jacobi's Disquit. Analyt. de functionibus simplicibus (Berlin, 1825).
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